The common goblin is weak, cowardly, and exceedingly unintelligent. Not helping matters is the seemingly inborn instinct of goblins to surrender, even when it means certain death, when they do not possess an overwhelming numbers advantage. However, the true danger of goblins lie in their strength in numbers. If a single goblin somehow managed to suppress her fear and stand against even a ten year old with a kitchen knife, she would likely find herself in several pieces on the floor while the child walked away unscathed. Even as few as a dozen goblins, however, are a difference story. For the goblin mind, numbers are everything. A trio of goblins could come upon half a dozen elderly peasants on the road and think themselves outmatched, yet that